How to actually get over your ex and move on

It is important to be honest about the reality of your relationship, and to acknowledge the fundamental problems that lead to the break-up.

Focus on yourself and your personal needs — being newly single is an opportunity to invest in yourself, as opposed to a partner.

So this is probably the 57th article you've read after getting dumped and now you're sick and tired of trying to figure out how to get over "the one that got away" already.

I get it.

A lot of "advice" out there tries to deconstruct getting over a breakup into lists, as if you can get over someone you loved and lost by checking another item off your list as though you're going grocery shopping. And sure, you probably should "take time for yourself" and "reconnect with friends" and all that, as we'll see. But to me, all of these things seem like slapping a band-aid on the gaping flesh wound where your heart used to be: technically, they don't really hurt to try, but by themselves, they can only do so much.

So before admonishing you to "get back out there," I want you to try to look at things a little differently first. Getting over an ex has a lot more to do with knowing who you are and the story you tell yourself about your past relationship than it does with trying to mitigate the pain every time you're reminded of them.

To that end, it's a process, not a destination. You have to be patient. I know, that's hard to hear, but the only way around it is through it.

And I know you probably won't believe me when I say this, but it really is going to be okay.

Therefore, when you lose a relationship, especially one that was so important and central to your everyday life, you lose that associated meaning. And to lose meaning is to lose a part of yourself. So all of these things are intimately connected — your relationships, your sense of meaning and purpose, and your perception of who you are.

That feeling of emptiness we all feel when we lose someone we love is actually a lack of meaning and lack of identity. There is, quite literally, a hole inside of ourselves. Everything becomes a blank void, empty of any real purpose, and we might even begin to wonder if there's really any point to life at all.

If you wallow in this kind of thinking for too long, you end up clinging to the past, desperately trying to "fix" everything to somehow get your old life back.

But the hard pill to swallow here is this: part of you is now dead and gone. It's time to accept that and start rebuilding your life so you can move on.

Allow yourself to move on. Jonathan Bachman/Reuters

Getting over someone requires new sources of meaning

Surrounding yourself with people who truly care about you is probably one of the most common pieces of advice for getting over someone. It's great advice, but it's not because you'll just start to "feel better" and then forget about the fact that you're going to be sleeping alone tonight. And it's also not because these people provide an outlet for you to work through the failed relationship out loud — though that doesn't hurt.

No, the real reason is that connecting/reconnecting with people who care about you will start to add meaning back into your life, the meaning that was so abruptly pulled out from underneath you like a cheap dining room rug.

In order to restore that meaning through reconnecting with people, however, you need to make it about more than just you and your past failed relationship. Yes, you need time to vent and to figure things out, and having someone there for that is helpful. But you can't start to rebuild meaning in your life until you take the time to cultivate relationships that are separate and distinct from your old relationship and your old self.

See the relationship for what it was

Another way to separate yourself from your past relationship and move on is to take an objective look at what the relationship was really like. If part of the story you tell yourself is, "We were so perfect for each other. We should be together forever! Why doesn't he/she see that?" then I'd bet you're falling victim to more than a few biases that you're simply not aware of.

First, we tend to see the past through rose-colored glasses. "Everything was great back then. Well, maybe not perfect, but 98% of the time, we were just the best couple ever. What happened?"

The truth is, our memories are pretty bad and we often only remember the things that fit into whatever story we want to believe right now. In this case, we remember the good times most because that's what we want our reality to be right now.

And if you can't objectively see if/when you're doing this, it's possible your relationship failed because, in reality, it was a toxic relationship. Toxic relationships only ever survive on drama, and as the drama ramps up to keep the relationship going, you become dependent on that drama, or even addicted to it. What makes it worse is that the meaning you derive from that toxic relationship is skewed and distorted. You start thinking that irrational jealousy or controlling behavior or snide comments were somehow actually signs of their undying love for you.

So I'm here to tell you this: Relationships don't end because two people did something wrong to each other—they end because two people are something wrong for each other.

Be honest with yourself about the negative aspects of your broken relationship.nd3000/Shutterstock

Invest in your relationship with yourself

There seems to be some debate out there about whether or not you should take some time to yourself and just be alone for a while. I think you should, and doubly so if your failed relationship was a toxic one.

If your identity has been so wrapped up in a relationship that's now gone, well, it's a good time to explore who you are in contexts outside of that relationship. Rushing out to find someone to fill that void without really figuring out what you want and what you need (see below) is a recipe for recurring relationship disaster.

A lot of times, it's this very lack of awareness around one's needs that leads to a relationship falling apart in the first place. So one of the best things you can do is figure out who you are, what you need, and how to get those needs met. And to truly know that, you have to figure it out on your own.

Figuring out what your needs really are

Conflicts in relationships almost always arise because one or both people aren't getting their needs met in some way. And it's often the case that those needs are either not communicated effectively or someone's needs are being ignored. Either way, the root cause of the problem is a lack of awareness of one's needs. Relationships end when someone decides the cost of not getting their needs met is no longer bearable.

We all have these needs in our relationships, but we all prioritize them a little differently. And disproportionately valuing one need over the others often causes issues in our relationships that might even develop into long-term patterns.

The key to understanding what went wrong in your past relationships and having better relationships in the future is identifying your needs and your partner's needs and figuring out ways to meet them.